Multisport training helps Vancouver swim team be better athletes

As a young kid growing up in Canada, three-time Olympic swimmer Brian Johns doesn’t remember much talk about physical literacy. Kids just played sports. Maybe they specialized in one. Maybe they didn’t.

“My dad was an all-around athlete; therefore, he put me and my brother into five or six different sports,” Johns says. “We both decided to focus on swimming, but we came to the sport in different ways.”

Now, as the head coach for the Vancouver Pacific Swim Club, Johns sees the value in kids trying lots of different sports throughout childhood. Each sport teaches a kid something new, but, like a jigsaw puzzle, the pieces all fit together.

“To dive effectively in swimming, you have to be a great jumper, but an athlete might learn that better in a volleyball context. Basketball players need aerobic conditioning to play full games, but they might build that base in swimming,” Johns says.

“By exposing athletes to many different sports and activities, they are learning many movement skills necessary for success in the sport they end up choosing.”

That’s the reasoning behind a recent partnership between the Vancouver Pacific Swim Club and the University of British Columbia’s Active Kids program.

A trial program geared toward young swimmers was launched in the fall of 2016. It was such a success, it became part of both the winter and spring programming.

Part of UBC’s School of Kinesiology outreach programs, the Active Kids classes are geared toward children ages one and a half to 18 years. They operate seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., and they are particularly popular because they are recreational and non-competitive, says Dylan Brown, program manager for Active Kids. They’re simply about getting kids moving in a variety of ways: jumping, running, balancing, stretching.

Between 40 and 50 young swimmers from the club participate in the Active Kids gymnastics classes twice a week, every week, for three months.

“One of our driving philosophies is to get as many children as possible having positive experiences in sport and trying a range of activities,” Brown says.

“Learning the fundamentals — running, kicking, throwing, catching, safe landings, agility, balance, coordination — these things are so important for kids to learn because it gives them the full package, what they need to be active for life.”

So far, so good. Jason Chugh is an assistant coach with Vancouver Pacific Swim Club. He says he has already noticed an improvement in the performances of the young swimmers. “It’s what you’d expect: better coordination, better abilities in the pool, so on and so forth,” Chugh says. “It’s all incremental, right? You see it as a slow progression.”

Slow, perhaps, but important. Not only are the kids swimming better, they’re gaining confidence and learning skills that they can use for the rest of their lives. “Multisport development is an important part of the club’s philosophy,” he adds. “It’s about developing well-rounded athletes. It’s more of a holistic approach.”

And, notes Johns, if a kid does decide to specialize, and perhaps one day go professional, a multi-sport approach will actually help them. “When they do choose to focus on a single sport eventually, it is a safe bet that they are choosing it because it is the sport they are enjoying the most, which will help ensure the long-term mental health of the athlete as they reach higher levels of competition.”

Down the road, Brown hopes the project will create kids who are active for life, not just active as children. “Specializing in one sport doesn’t necessarily set a kid up to be confident and motivated to take part in other physical activities as they get older,” he says.

“The goal is to be as physically active and healthy for as long as possible.”

Shelley Boettcher once had a psychic tell her she’d make a good used-car salesman. Instead, she became a writer after stints as a cook, a chambermaid, a nanny and the only woman on a rural construction crew. Based in Calgary, Canada, she is an award-winning writer whose work has appeared in newspapers and magazines around the world. She holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Western Ontario, and she is the best-selling author of Uncorked, a guide to wine shopping in Alberta, Canada. The third edition was published in Fall 2013. Follow Shelley on Twitter, @shelley_wine.

Active For Life

Active for Life is the place where parents go to learn about activities for kids. Physical education leads to physical literacy, which is critical for child development. Physical literacy also gives active kids the best chance to someday compete in high-performance sport. Kids activities are organized here by age and gender, so parents can find fun and engaging ways of making sure their children get the recommended daily amount of physical activity. Activities for toddlers are aimed at the development of fundamental movement skills, while activities for children build on the fundamentals to establish more complex sport skills that can be used to play any number of sports and activities. Exercises for kids enhance their physical development. In the early stages of child growth, early childhood development is dependent on appropriate exercises for children. Because kids play is good for kids health.